Research happens across all of Google, and affects everything we do.

Research at Google is unique. Because so much of what we do hasn't been done
before, the lines between research and development are often very blurred. This
hybrid approach allows our discoveries to affect the world, both through improving
Google products and services, and through the broader advancement of scientific
knowledge.

Latest from the blog

Featured Collaboration

Google and UCSB partner on Quantum Computing Hardware Initiative

John Martinis and
his team at UC Santa Barbara has joined the Quantum Artifical Intelligence
team at Google in a hardware initiative to design and build new quantum
information processors based on superconducting electronics. With an integrated
hardware group, the Quantum AI team will now be able to implement and test new
designs for quantum optimization and inference processors based on recent
theoretical insights as well as our learnings from the D-Wavequantum annealing
architecture. Google will continue to collaborate with D-Wave scientists and to
experiment with the "Vesuvius" machine at NASA Ames which will be upgraded to a
1000 qubit "Washington" processor.

Featured Event

CHI 2015

Seoul, Korea

April 18 - 23

In April, the 2015 ACM conference on Human
Factors in Computing Systems (CHI 2015) will take place in Seoul, Korea. With
the theme of "Crossings" - crossing disciplines, crossing people and technology,
crossing physical and digital - CHI 2015 will draw an international community of
scientists in a celebration of the forward-looking nature of Human-Computer
Interaction (HCI) research. As a Champion-level sponsor, Google will be on hand to
share our latest research discoveries, with Googlers presenting papers, offering
workshops, and participating in panels and case studies. We hope to see you there
in order to share more about the exciting HCI research at Google.